
Elon Musk, the creator of the X/Twitter platform and tech millionaire, posted a joke about the X social media network, which garnered positive feedback from the cryptocurrency community. Billy Markus, the co-creator of Dogecoin and persona known on X as “Shibetoshi Nakamoto,” was the first of those to reply.
https://x.com/BillyM2k/status/1747027491213259263?s=20
In addition to their mutual love of memes and frequent posting of them on the X app, Markus often expresses his support for Elon Musk and his tweets.
Musk shared a well-known meme showing a man and a woman sharing a bed but resting apart, with the concerned lady saying, “He’s probably thinking about…” The male is usually thinking about something completely else, but in Musk’s post, she guessed correctly. Musk then included the second half of the meme, in which the lady is thrilled and gives the lying man a hug while they are sleeping next to one other.
X platform slammed by Ripple CEO for XRP scam videos
Brad Garlinghouse, the CEO of Ripple Labs, recently tweeted criticism of Elon Musk’s X platform and YouTube for allowing fraudulent XRP videos to appear as sponsored advertisements.
The CEO of Ripple said that XRP frauds on the aforementioned sites are getting more complex, and neither YouTube nor X are taking any action to stop them.
Charles Hoskinson, the inventor of IOG and the Cardano blockchain, and Michael Saylor, the president of MicroStrategy and an advocate for Bitcoin, have recently voiced similar grievances and warnings to respective communities.
Both expressed dissatisfaction about scammers employing artificial intelligence (AI) to create their scam movies and taking advantage of the many chances it offers.
The inventor of Cardano thinks it will be hard to tell these AI-generated scam movies apart from real ones in two or three years. Saylor cautioned his millions of Twitter followers not to fall for these frauds by tweeting that his crew has removed these phoney recordings of him talking about fictitious Bitcoin giveaways.
The phoney Ripple CEO also extended an invitation to the Ripple community to take part in an XRP airdrop in the previously stated fraud video that included Garlinghouse. In order to accomplish so, he advises them to transfer any quantity of XRP to “Ripple’s” wallet in order to get twice that amount back. This is a standard tactic used by numerous cryptocurrency scammers.